Some thoughts about Security
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@gjacobse said:
I can secure a hard drive in a air tight container, encapsulate it in 4 inches of steel, 200 inches of concrete, then drop it in the deepest part of the ocean. If someone thinks it has value,.. they will try to retrieve it.
The funny thing is someone would that it has value, because of all the work you put into protecting it
I guess that's my point here. This is my home server, it's not like I am protecting company information. How far is too far?
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@anonymous said:
I guess that's my point here. This is my home server, it's not like I am protecting company information. How far is too far?
You have 25 servers for home?
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I'm not sure there is ever "too much security." The more secure your systems are, the better.
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@anonymous said:
@BRRABill said:
You have 25 servers for home?
25 VM's on one host
You have 25 VMs for home?
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@BRRABill Yes
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@anonymous said:
The funny thing is someone would that it has value, because of all the work you put into protecting it
While some people might think that because of your extreme protections it has value, the reality is that most hackers won't bother - they will move on to easier targets.
Those who would be willing to go to nearly any length are probably doing so because they Know it's value, and that value is greater than the cost of them getting the data.
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@gjacobse said:
Going along the lines of something @scottalanmiller said, how much is your data worth... to YOU. If it is worth something, then it is worth that level of effort.
Actually the guideline is "how much is it worth to someone else" and you need to make it cost more to hack then it is worth for them to have hacked.
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@anonymous said:
@gjacobse said:
I can secure a hard drive in a air tight container, encapsulate it in 4 inches of steel, 200 inches of concrete, then drop it in the deepest part of the ocean. If someone thinks it has value,.. they will try to retrieve it.
The funny thing is someone would that it has value, because of all the work you put into protecting it
I guess that's my point here. This is my home server, it's not like I am protecting company information. How far is too far?
Depends, is the value in learning about security practices? Or do you really feel that you are protecting something worthwhile?
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@Dashrender said:
that's not really an issue - he could have tons of gaming VMs, like Scott now has a MineCraft PE gaming VM.
The bigger question is, what are you hosting to the internet?
I'm just amazed to have that many servers for personal use. Kudos!
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@GlennBarley said:
I'm not sure there is ever "too much security." The more secure your systems are, the better.
I don't agree. That's the same logic that SMBs use to say "more availability is better", but we know that's far from true. Security, availability, performance, capacity - they all take time and money. They are only valuable as long as there is a return. Spending $100 to protect $10 doesn't make sense.
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@BRRABill said:
@Dashrender said:
that's not really an issue - he could have tons of gaming VMs, like Scott now has a MineCraft PE gaming VM.
The bigger question is, what are you hosting to the internet?
I'm just amazed to have that many servers for personal use. Kudos!
Well think about building a lab. You want a storage device, jump box and logging kind of at a minimum. That's three.
Now you want to test out a few OSes. You might have a VM for 2012 R2, 2016, 2012, 2008 R2, 2008, 2003 R2, CentOS 6, CentOS 7, Suse Leap, Suse Tumbleweed, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 15.10, Fedora 23, Arch Linux, Debian Jessie, FreePBX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly, Solaris, Windows 10 and Gentoo.
That's 25 VMs without running any services, just having vanilla test platforms for different OSes!
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@scottalanmiller said:
Now you want to test out a few OSes. You might have a VM for 2012 R2, 2016, 2012, 2008 R2, 2008, 2003 R2, CentOS 6, CentOS 7, Suse Leap, Suse Tumbleweed, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 15.10, Fedora 23, Arch Linux, Debian Jessie, FreePBX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly, Solaris, Windows 10 and Gentoo.
That is "a few" OSes?
Hey, to each their own. I have a hard time just managing my Xbox One.
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It's not many, really. All mainstream ones that you might want to have access to to test something or see how it installs or whatever. More than I test, but not many more. I don't test Arch or DragonFly, for example. But if you are testing appliances like FreeNAS and NAS4Free those will add up quickly too!
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@scottalanmiller said:
Well think about building a lab. You want a storage device, jump box and logging kind of at a minimum. That's three.
I don't have a storage device or logging yet. What do you recommend? And what do you mean by a storage device? Like for shared /home?
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Yeah, like a shared NFS or SMB for Windows. Or even ownCloud and stuff like that.
Logging... ELK. Can't beat it.
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@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Now you want to test out a few OSes. You might have a VM for 2012 R2, 2016, 2012, 2008 R2, 2008, 2003 R2, CentOS 6, CentOS 7, Suse Leap, Suse Tumbleweed, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 15.10, Fedora 23, Arch Linux, Debian Jessie, FreePBX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly, Solaris, Windows 10 and Gentoo.
That is "a few" OSes?
Hey, to each their own. I have a hard time just managing my Xbox One.
Oh, that's just a start. Much easier to manage today that it was "back in the day" as well! Over the whole Y2K thing I was interning, and had setup a computer to multi-boot Windows 95, 98, ME, XP, OS/2, OS/2 Warp, Red Hat 4, and I'm not sure how many different x86 compatible machine control things. I was ECSTATIC when that new thing called VirtualBox came around. Just thinking about what, and how easily, we can do things today compared to back then can make my head spin.
Edit: I forgot NT3.5, 4.0 and Windows 2000 as well.
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@scottalanmiller What about monitoring?
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